Prince EWS
Global Moderator
No-one's denying that OD batting tactics and skillsets have changed. The difference between absolutists and relativists here doesn't lie there. I actually agree with you there; the difference is in how I apply that information to how I rate players.That's cute. But Vik and I are saying that ODI cricket was played wrong before.
We can all observe that scoring rates have increased over time in ODI cricket. For absolutists, it's very important to figure out why this is the case when rating players -- if it's due to improvement in batting tactics over time, then modern bowlers' high economy rates need to be forgiven, but batsmen's strike rates do not. If it's due to the standard of bowling going down, however, then the opposite is true. If it's due to changes in rules or bat sizes or something like that, then both modern economy rates and olden day strike rates need to be forgiven. It is very important to an absolutist to decipher the cause as it will then impact on how the absolute skill of a player should be rated. You are writing to me as if I'm an absolutist who happens to disagree with you about the cause of the change in scoring rates -- that you think it's improved batting and think I think it's something else (I don't, ftr).
I think skill absolutism is an absolutely terrible way to judge players though; I'd rather scoop my eyeballs out with a spoon. I too recognise that scoring rates have changed in ODIs, but as a relativist all I need to do is recognise this rather than try to pinpoint why, as I rate player performances relative to their peers. It might be true that Bevan would be a slug in the modern game or it might be true that he'd score quicker -- the relativist position is that it just doesn't matter either way when rating him, because each player's value lies in what he's doing relative to everyone else at the time, not what he'd do if he was sent through a time machine to play imaginary cricket.
Last edited: